HopeArts

Updates from HopeArts.

  1. Art Topic: “Burt Reynolds is Dead”

    Burt Reynolds is dead…

    https://open.spotify.com/user/…

    Burt Reynolds is dead … and I am listening to an utter stranger’s Southern Gothic playlist on Spotify. Since Sunday of Labor Day weekend my time has been spent revolving around the “Christmas in July” play (penned by our very own Dennis O’Donnell), and it’s final tech week preparations. On the ride into the church building from my suburban home I’ve listened to a podcast on Christian and Pagan reliquary given at the Met. Museum of Art, and another podcast of an introductory lecture on Plato’s aesthetic notions by an Oxford professor.

    Burt Reynolds is dead… I am listening to an absolute stranger’s Southern Gothic playlist… and (oddly even to me) this all seems to make some sense that I would write Today’s Art Topic, despite it having nothing to do with such a context — while nonetheless being crafted in the midst of it all. There just is … something… about the irrelevancy of it all to the topic: the relationship(s) of ourselves to Art, and of ourselves to creating/creation (of works).

    What does it mean, what does it look like to be “charitable” towards an artist and their work? What does it mean to “be the Body of Christ” to the artist, to an artwork, to creating, to Art itself?

  2. Arts Topic: “the Holiness of Creating”

    In summation of our discussion/posts so far on Christian Aesthetics I recall our minds to the notion that a Christian Aesthetic involves, in part, an ethos towards Art like that of Shem’s and Japheth’s reverential carrying of cloaks across their shoulders to PROTECT the vulnerability and beauty of their father.  

    If Creation and a creation, Art and some piece of art, all are so holy and venerable, then so to the act of creating, an act of creation, ought to be considered as a holy thing.  Creation ought to be considered one of the holiest of activities, esteemed as a holy pursuit. Aye, you could say that an act of creation is a sitting at His feet, a laying at His feet, a glorifying Him in that manner in which He Himself choose to do for Himself.  Our Holy God (Father, Son, Holy Spirit), deserving glory, in holy activity created, so that His reflection might be seen in His creation, that His Holy nature might be known. When the artist creates, in that act of creation, she is modeling back to God that holy activity for which He is so deserving of glory.

    Do we consider the activity of art making in such ways? Going back to the refrain of Philippians 4:8, in light of these thoughts, isn’t art making noble, true, good, righteous, excellent, praiseworthy, loving, just activity?

     

  3. Arts Topic: “Christian Aesthetics pt.2”

    “Finally, Brothers, whatever is … noble… think on these things.”

    What is this verse of Philippians 4:8 (NIV) indicating?  Does this verse indicate a basis for an Christian Aesthetic of Art?

    From the previous T.A.T. it seems the question of a Christian Aesthetic  could be considered a two-way ethic, whereby the viewer has as much a responsibility to esteem and keep worthy the subject matter of a piece of creation, a piece of Art, in every bit a way as we might another person. I think that could be an easily argued assertion, at least. If nothing else, the manner in which the artist puts herself into the work of art, doing so vulnerably or / and (presumably) submitted to the Spirit of God, well surely this substantiates and undergirds the moral onus on the viewer.

    As a writer I do sort of take some comfort in the old adage that the written piece is often more intelligent than the writer depending upon whose reading it. But maybe there really is something there. An artist creates in a sort of meta-language (i.e. her medium), and this medium speaks across the limitations of language, surely, but Language (meta-language) is that which exists between people, and is as much dependent upon the receiver’s supplying of their own experience-steeped associations and nuances as it is supplied (by the same) from the speaker. And yes, I mean language, not merely communication.

    And maybe, here, the real collaboration within Art is the collaboration between audience and artist, like two parents contributing the existential genetic material of experience and understanding (along with  Spirit-born understanding in each) to the child of Creation, a Holy utterance birthed in that co-mingling. In which case, as the viewer comes together, considering what is true, noble, right, just, pure, excellent, praiseworthy, beautiful about that thing the artist has considered true, noble, right, just, pure, excellent, praiseworthy, beautiful, we get something which is just a little bit more of God.

    If the artist creates something, some piece of art which deals with Creation — itself reflecting the glory of God — and deals with some aspect of God (like nobility, or justness), then like Japheth and Shem is there any response we can make as the audience which doesn’t intellectually, soulfully walk in backwards, the robes of truth, nobility, rightness, justness, purity, excellence, praiseworthiness, beauty draped across our shoulders to lie upon that Art?

  4. Arts Topic: “Christian Aesthetics”

    Does our Christian Faith provide for us an in-built (even an in-dwelt) Christian aesthetic for Art? What formulation would that aesthetic take, especially in light of the exhortation of Philippians 4:8, which says:

    “8Finally, brothers,whatever is true, whatever is honorable,whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable — if anything isexcellent or praiseworthy — think on these things. .”

    Or, perhaps more saliently considered, Philippians 2:13, which says,

    ” 13For it is God who works in you to will and to act on behalf of His good pleasure..”

    Is good (Christian) art that which most closely approximates the highest notions of say, truth or purity or beauty or nobility (for instance)? Does the worth of Christian art  rest contingently on the maturity of the believing artist more than upon the maturity of craft? How do we define Beauty as Christians?

    One very historic and relevant question: if God’s beauty is expressed in / through His Creation,  and of Man it was said that (s)he was very good, then what of the nude form — is it beautiful? Was God covering up something shameful when He gave Adam and Eve skins of animals to wear, or maybe, was God covering the beautiful up from shaming glances, protecting the beautiful, making it sacrosanct?

    If nothing else does God’s covering of the beautiful suggest that it is the heart relationship towards the Beautiful — the audience’s relationship to the  art (and not the art itself) — which is made unworthy of viewing that nude form which is too worthy to be viewed by shame-filled eyes? Put slightly more direct, God’s covering suggests it is not the nude which is unworthy, but rather the nude is worthy of protection from the shame-seeing onlooker.

    If we truly accept it is the Spirit of God dwelling within us to will and to act according to His good purposes, doesn’t that heart frame the conversation, then, not by asking what is appropriate but by asking have treated or portrayed the beautiful appropriately? Have we loved and done Beauty justice and kindness and rightness and done so praiseworthily?

    Do we in our hearts act as Shem and Japheth, and  carry a cloak across our shoulders backwards and cover our father’s  nakedness? Is it possible to paint a nude but, paint it so that true Beauty is covered in like manner?

    This certainly makes the question of Aesthetics one of Ethics, and of the ethical responses of the viewer (more than a question of the nature of the Art), and arguably (the ethics) of the artist.

    ***(Personally, I think in certain (maybe rare) nudes those nudes can actually function as a cover of / for Beauty as expressed in the human form, in such a manner as Shakespeare wrote of the beauty of His lover by ironically discussing her stinky breath.)

     

  5. Art Topic: “Friendship with the World”

    How does a Christian Artist avoid “friendship with the world”? Being “in the world, but not of it”?

    As a one with a degree in Philosophy I almost choke on my own question — the amount of presuppositions and implicit assumptions upon which that question rests, as well as all the undefined elements (to the question), is huge.  But I think I kinda like asking it that way, for that reason.

    Involved in the question are my unexpressed notions that Christian Artists somehow interact with the world, such that they could be at risk of becoming “friends with the world” (whatever that means, since I have not yet explained that phrase). Well, I would certainly hope the Christian Artist, in one sense, is always at risk of being friends with the world in which they are, but are not of.

    But here is where the storyteller has to take over the philosopher. I was thinking the other morning, in a flight of fancy, about the old descriptive chestnut,

    “that [child] has a lot of their daddy in them.”

    I began considering how the Christian ontology changes the way we speak, even on such a level as making such expressions as that near meaningless, if not judgmental and wrong. I started wondering how such colloquialism at one time provided an ability to make declarative, “naming” statements which imparted (facets of) identity. As humans (and especially as artists) we are made to call out — ex-nihilo of the conceptual / intellectual landscapes and emotional  ethers (in the fashions of ones created in the image of a creator God and bearing His creative stamp) — the truth and identity and even worth of (created) things.

    See, here is where the real “Existential Rub” comes in for me. Frederick Buechner wrote a book which spoke to me in the final year of my father’s life, “Longing for Home.” In it Buechner describes a moment of shared joy, an experience of joy his wife and daughter and himself all felt at watching a killer whale leap from the water into air, before crashing back down into the water. In this book, and in other, fictional works, Buechner explores what it means to long for a fatherland as yet to come — that land to which such moments of joy and beauty as that with the whale harken. The saying goes something like, happy  is the man for whom any land is whom but blessed is the man who eagerly awaits a certain fatherland as yet to come.

    Matt Ryniker’s sermon on Hebrews 11 (indeed the whole chapter in and of itself) sort of speaks to this sojourning pilgrimage through these earthly and mortal coils while looking onward in faith. It is about hope, I guess, that quality produced through suffering leading to perseverance leading to character leading to hope that doesn’t disappoint because God has shed the Love of His Son into our Hearts through His Holy Spirit.

    How do we not live as friends of this world? Well, it is living in or at least living for that far off fatherland to come, which we know of in part… but only in part. I think it is that part we know of which we as artists absolutely have to be making our subject matter. A tiny picture of that is writing about the joy coming from seeing a killer whale leaping out of the water, and about the reminder this is of where we have yet to see and explore.

    I have to wonder if, on some level, that that is not the very role of the Christian Artist — to harken (not necessarily in an evangelical way solely, since evangelism is for those not in relationship with Christ) to that far-off land, the onus of the artist so to speak.

     

  6. Weekly Arts Update 09/25

    W.A.U. (Weekly Arts Update) 09/25

    Last Week’s HopeArts Group:

    Last Week’s Arts Hope Group (the first in over a half decade, I think), was very well attended, with 10+ attendees. We read aloud through the first chapter and a half of Hebrews, and the introduction to Buechner’s “Telling Secrets.”  The conversation revolved around the notion of Story, and our stories, chiefly the importance and place of stories in relevantly communicating. One dissenting voice offered a counterbalancing perspective (also raised within the Buechner reading) of the relative importance of subjectivity in receiving and telling of stories.

    The beginning thrust of the conversation was upon how the  telling our secrets, if even just to ourselves, helps us to connect with the core of what it means to be human, the quintessential and existential experience we all share, most notably in that of the gospel.

    From the discussion of the Buechner material, done in light of the grander meta-narrative (of our lives) as indicated in the first chapter of the epistle / book of Hebrews, we concluded by raising the question: into what are we calling people when we tell our secrets and stories? Continued discussion over these topics are encouraged here on Realm in this Group.

    Upcoming Group Meeting:

    This week (for the HopeArts Hope Group) is “open creative time”. While there is no group meeting this Wednesday evening, the writer’s workshop is meeting at Genuine  Joe’s coffee shop on Anderson to workshop any pieces for which folks  are wanting input (same time, 6:30-8:00 P.M., NO childcare).

    However, the next Art Hope Group will meet Wednesday Oct. 3rd, 6:30-8:00 P.M. (same place; childcare at Hope Chapel).  We will spend a goodly amount of time in chapter 2 of Hebrews, and will need to have read (if possible) the first two chapters of both the Buechner and L’Engle books.

    Events on the Horizon:

    Saturday,  Oct. 6th Gallery Reception for the Textile Art Show “Fabric of Community”; 7:00 P.M. – 9:00 P.M. ; bring a pre-packaged finger-food/reception style treat.

    Saturday, Nov.17th Arts Group Fundraiser “Crafted with Hope: Makers Fair” all day in the Hope Chapel parking lot. Booth space for selling work is available, as well as donation pieces are welcomed. Check with Richard C. and Ashley Littlefield for all details.

    Did you Know:

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